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Alternative Female Choice Tactics in the Scorpionfly Hylobittacus apicalis(Mecoptera) and Their Implications

Randy Thornhill
- 01 May 1984 - 
- Vol. 24, Iss: 2, pp 367-383
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TLDR
The results suggest that female choice controls male behavior, and when females become choosy, males are forced to obtain rare large prey despite the increased risks to males associated with this behavior.
Abstract
Females of the scorpionfly Hylobittacus apicalis choose mates on the basis of material benefits (nuptial arthropod prey size) and probably on the basis of genetic benefits males deliver at mating. Females feed on the male's prey throughout copulation. They prefer males with large prey as mates and often refuse males who present small prey. That females may value male genetic quality is suggested by differences in ability of males to obtain large prey, which if inherited would influence offspring fitness, and by females often terminating mating with males with small prey before they transfer any sperm or a complete ejaculate. Females hunt only when males with prey are not available because hunting exposes individuals to predators. Female Hylobittacus apicalis exhibit alternative mate choice tactics, which are condition-dependent in expression and probably comprise a conditional strategy. Body size, recent feeding history, and male availability determine how discriminating an individual female actually is, and these conditions may determine the value of material and genetic benefits in mate choice decisions. The results suggest that female choice controls male behavior. When females become choosy, males are forced to obtain rare large prey despite the increased risks to males associated with this behavior. The implications of the findings on H. apicalis are discussed in relation to condition dependent female choice patterns in other species and the evolutionary maintenance of female choice.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Biological markets: supply and demand determine the effect of partner choice in cooperation, mutualism and mating

TL;DR: A formal model in which the influence of the market mechanism on selection is made explicit and a dominant role for partner choice is ensured in the formation of partnerships is presented.
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Search Theory and Mate Choice. I. Models of Single-Sex Discrimination

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the expected fitness consequences of two alternative decision-making strategies: a best-of-n strategy (whereby searching individuals choose the best mate from a sample of size n) and a strategy based on sequential sampling, where the searching individual establishes a critical mate quality and continues searching until encountering a mate at or above this quality.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cryptic female choice: criteria for establishing female sperm choice.

TL;DR: The criteria necessary to demonstrate the postcopulatory ability of females to favor the sperm of one conspecific male over another, that is, sperm choice, are considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Time constraints and multiple choice criteria in the sampling behaviour and mate choice of the fiddler crab, Uca annulipes

TL;DR: It is suggested that the number of males sampled (and other indices of ‘‘sampling effort’’) may not be reliable indicators of female choosiness and may not reflect the strength of female mating preferences under certain conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mate Density, Predation Risk, and the Seasonal Sequence of Mate Choices: A Dynamic Game

TL;DR: A computer-simulation model of mate choice, featuring two different quality groups (based on offspring per mating) in each sex, finds the opportunity for selection for mate quality is highest at intermediate densities of predators and of potential mates.